90 The soft glow of candlelight- the stark simplicity of chromed steel. Our dramatic candelabra highlights the most unusual corner of your room. creating just the right atmosphere i 44 1 / 2 " long I i 13 t h" diameter -- 33 dnpless candles Included. $35 -1- - .,.,.,.,.,."., - N - .. - .. ,. Mail orders invited Write for our free 1962 Chnstmas Gift Portfol io GEORG Very accommodating-our triO of tables stack together In their compact nest-give Instant solo performances as cocktail tables wherever you want them. Chromed steel with black or white detacha ble tops. 11" x 11" xII" $85. - --I IJ . " ( / N INC. 667 Fifth Avenue New York 22 I Wilmot Ridge Scarsdale, N. Y. Early 1770 s. RoyaJ Worcester designed dessert service for blind 7th Earl of Coventry. Requested pattern he could touch. Ruse spray with bud and blossom in relief on scalloped-edged plate Original set costly. Reproductions available. Called HBlind Earl H . Exact copies Look for them at fine china stores Close eyes. Run fingertips over surface. See It as the Earl did. (Then open eyes and peek at our other exquisite dinnerware patterns.) Museums collect Royal \Vorcester (Shouldn't you?) .. :: . N !fi :' +: .,. . J.-' ::... ..:.:.t?( _'. . i". ..h;: " :::.:- ,,' ... ' Æ. .( . . >" : L ' );. .,.: ":.. ^""" "t.-:=:o. v:. . . "* \.. '::'$ :;. '!( . 0:" .:" "0"'" ....... hi :.... ..., ->' $: / , {*":"" '.... .' .... : .:: : . Y1= >> ;":: l7 ',". ".'.,." W:: ":"" ':.ii., .".......-:.... "':':' .:., ... . ::: '::., "If." Send 25C to Roval Worcester. Depi. C. 11 E. 26th St. N.Y. 10. for helpful fme chma booklet and pattern pamphlets. and she left me wIth Dr. Black's book. I then read the following paragraphs un- der the heading 'Mackelvie, Ylackel- vey, Mackelvy, Mackilvie.' I'm giving them to you in full, General, because all this seemed later on to have a direct bearIng on my involvement in the plot to kidnap President Eisenhower. The paragraphs went like this: "MACKEL VIE, MACKEL VEY, MAC- KELVY, MACKILVIE, G. Mac Shealb- haigh, 'Selbach's son.' Sealbach mac Shealbhaich is the hero in the tale of the Balieveolan Glassrig (Macdougall, Folk Tales and Fazry Lore, 1910, p. 216). Morice Macsalny of Dumfriesshire ren- dered homage, 1296. His seal bears a hunting horn stringed S' Morici f' saIni (Bain, II, p. 210, 557). In 1300 we have record of an allowance to Mathew, son of Maurice Make Salui, a Galloway hos- tage (ibid., 1179; His!. Docs., I I, p. 426). Robert M'Kelvie in officecroft in Tongue- land 1736 (Kirk cud bright). and Andrew M'Kelvie was barn-officer of the Earl of Stair, 1744 (lf7igtown). In 1684 the name appears (Parish) as 1cKelvie, Mcllvey, Mclwie, lVlcKelway, Kelvie (Kelvy). "SELBACH, or Sealbach, an old Gaelic personal name, meaning 'rich in posses- sions' (Watson 1, p. 239). The Annals of Ulster under 701 mentions the de- struction of Dunollie, near Oban, the principal stronghold of the tribe of Loarn, by Selbach: 'distructio Duin Onlaigh apud Sealbach;' and in 714 its reconstruc- tion by him: 'Dun Ollaigh construitur apud Selbacum.' Selbach claimed the chief- ship of the tribe of Loarn (719) and also the kingship of Argyll (723). In 723 he relinquished his kingdom and entered the monastic life." "That's the end of the reference I read in that big hook." "Very interesting indeed." "I found it so, General, but for some reason it left me jumpy with anxiety. As I stood there in that ancient office, inhaling that peculiar odor that old rec- ords have and watching Miss Bin- nIng as she scooted around fulfilling the requests of other ancestor worshippers, I felt as if I were playing a small but essential part in some kind of thriller- something along the lines of that fine old movie called 'The 39 Steps,' one of Hitchcock's first pictures. MIss Bin- ning herself looked like a character actress, and so did all the other clerks; they all looked to me like people play- ing parts, rather than real people. Then, the fact that what she had pulled out of the shelves to show me was a book purporring to have been published by the New York Public Library- Well, General, the whole setup seemed some- how eerie to me, and at the same time I was stimulated by the poetic images that that scholarly passage by Dr. Black created in the back of my battered head. I had told Miss Binning hriefly what had happened to my head-making an anecdote of it-and she had given me